Business Standard

To ‘make Amazon pay’, unions join Black Friday protest

Agitation part of global campaign against e-commerce firm

- SOURABH LELE

The words “underpaid”, “overworked”, “insufficie­nt breaks” reverberat­ed around the sites where Indian trade unions joined their counterpar­ts from around the world to stage protests against “sweatshop” Amazon.

“My stint (with Amazon) was similar to working at a sweatshop… 10-hour long shifts, low wages, insufficie­nt breaks, and leaves,” said a former employee at Amazon’s packing warehouse near Manesar, Haryana, who, along with several other former employees of the e-commerce giant, gathered at Jantar Mantar to join the “Make Amazon Pay” protest.

The agitation was part of the global action day called by the Make Amazon Pay coalition formed by over 80 trade unions, civil society organisati­ons, and environmen­talists. The year 2022 is the third that the coalition has organised a global day of action on Black Friday — one of the busiest shopping days of the year for Amazon.

Employees in dozens of countries — from Japan and Australia to India, the US and across Europe, are protesting against the company demanding better pay and working conditions. The campaign has charged Amazon with “squeezing every last drop it can” from “workers, communitie­s, and the planet” in the face of the cost-ofliving scandal, global debt crisis, and climate emergency. It has demanded that the company pay its workers fairly and respect their right to join unions, pay its fair share of taxes, and commit to real environmen­tal sustainabi­lity. Amazon has denied the allegation­s, saying that anyone could see for themselves by taking a tour of one of its sites. “These groups represent a variety of interests, and while we are not perfect in any area, if you objectivel­y look at what Amazon is doing in each one of these areas you’ll see that we do take our role and our impact very seriously. We are inventing and investing significan­tly in all these areas, playing a significan­t role in addressing climate change with the Climate Pledge commitment to be net-zero carbon by 2040, continuing to offer competitiv­e wages and great benefits, and inventing new ways to keep our employees safe and healthy in our operations network, to name just a few,” an Amazon spokespers­on said.

The ex-employee quoted earlier in the story said, “We were forced to pack around 250 items within an hour. It is a suffocatin­g hall without a place to sit. The breaks were so small that we could hardly eat anything.”

She said most workers at the centres were recruited by thirdparty organisati­ons and had an employment contract of less than a month. “I had to leave the job within 40 days after I fell ill and my leave was not approved by her manager,” she said.

Amazon India operates from over 41 fulfilment centres in 13 cities in Maharashtr­a, and Telangana among other states. Amazon India’s overall fulfilment network spreads across a floor area of more than 10 million sq ft, which is more than the land size of 125 football fields.

Protests took place in Delhi, Uttarakhan­d, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtr­a, Rajasthan, Jharkhand, and West Bengal. Several traders, hawkers, transport and gig workers’ unions participat­ed in the demonstrat­ions.

Dharmendra Kumar, one of the organisers and co-convener, Joint Action Committee against Foreign Retail and E-commerce, said, “Amazon is lowering working standards across the board. It is based on a business model that is ecological­ly disastrous and economical­ly unviable.”

 ?? PHOTO: SOURABH LELE ?? Agitation was part of the global action day called by the Make Amazon Pay coalition formed by over 80 trade unions
PHOTO: SOURABH LELE Agitation was part of the global action day called by the Make Amazon Pay coalition formed by over 80 trade unions

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